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30-05-2017, 11:54
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The final bottle chosen for us by Essex expert Justin Mason (@1970sBOY (https://twitter.com/1970sBOY)) who blogs at*Get Beer, Drink Beer (http://masonjust.blogspot.co.uk/)*is a stout from Chelmsford.We bought our 500ml bottle from Essex Food for £3.40 (http://www.essexfood.co.uk/product/round-tower-avena-500ml/). The ABV is 4.7% and the label is*minimalist to the point of plainness, its black and white shouting STOUT!*from afar. Justin says:
Situated a stone’s throw from the heart of Chelmsford, Essex’s only city, Round Tower have been producing some of the tastiest beers in the county since 2013. Unafraid of trying out new techniques or embracing new styles Simon and Hannah Tippler pride themselves on the quality of their beer, and rightly so. Avena Stout, whilst neither experimental or challenging, is nevertheless a good example of what they are capable of. Roast malts up front, a creamy middle and burnt-toast-like dry finish make for a very satisfying drink, one to be enjoyed whatever the weather or time of day.
We like stout in principle but really struggle to find many examples at anything like standard pub strength that especially excite us. Samuel Smith Oatmeal is one that does. We had high hopes for Avena because it*sent the right signals for us: modern without being aggressively trendy.
https://i2.wp.com/boakandbailey.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/avena_stout_head.jpg?resize=650%2C650
The moment the crown cap came off the bottle let out a fierce hiss and the foam started to rise up to the neck. It stopped short of gushing but it was an anxious moment and the very high carbonation made it*impossible to follow the instruction on the bottle*to pour carefully. However slowly decanted, however tilted the receiving vessel, every trickle of beer into the glass kicked up an untameable stack of beige froth. It took several minutes and several tips of the bottle to get the glass anywhere near full. The beer being very dark meant that it was also hard to*see what was happening with the sediment but we assume some, maybe even a lot, did escape.
The aroma, insofar as there was any, was of sharp, grassy hops over a background of hot metal. It wasn’t especially inviting, but it wasn’t off-putting either.
The flavour — the really important thing — struck us instantly as very pleasant. That*established, we tried to work out why. It’s not, after all, as if it*was perfect — there was a certain home-brew-like lack of polish that stopped just short of roughness. There was also a rattling*clash between the hops and malt which almost hinted at black IPA, only green and leafy rather than grapefruity. If we could tweak it it might be to shift the hops back in the mix to create more bitterness and present less vegetation. The fizz, too, is distracting; a beer like this is better with a cask-like softness. As it is the bubbles perhaps contribute to the sharpness that undercuts what does work.
And that is the sweetness and body which, for once, really does earn the cliched description*‘creamy’. As far as we know there’s no lactose in here but it had a sweet milk stout character anyway. So many micro-brewery stouts are clearly inspired by Guinness whereas this sits on the other side of the family tree with Mackeson– nourishing, rum and raisin, just the thing for Grandma in the lounge or Mum on the maternity ward.
And*that’s about all we’ve got. *As Justin suggests, it’s not the kind of beer you write essays about. But if you want a slightly skewed take*on traditional stout, or generally find stout hard-going, this could be just the thing.
Thanks, Justin — that’s been fun.
Next in this series: Rach from*Look at Brew suggests beers from Sussex.
Magical Mystery Pour #29: Round Tower Avena Stout (http://boakandbailey.com/2017/05/magical-mystery-pour-29-round-tower-avenna-stout/) originally posted at Boak & Bailey's Beer Blog (http://boakandbailey.com)


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